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The Very Stable Boundary Layer on Nights with Weak Low-Level Jets

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Title The Very Stable Boundary Layer on Nights with Weak Low-Level Jets
Names Banta, Robert M. (creator)
Mahrt, Larry (creator)
Vicker, Dean (creator)
Sun, Jielun (creator)
Balsley, Ben B. (creator)
Pichugina, Yelena L. (creator)
Williams, Eric J. (creator)
Date Issued 2007-09 (iso8601)
Abstract The light-wind, clear-sky, very stable boundary layer (vSBL) is characterized by large values of bulk
Richardson number. The light winds produce weak shear, turbulence, and mixing, and resulting strong
temperature gradients near the surface. Here five nights with weak-wind, very stable boundary layers during
the Cooperative Atmosphere–Surface Exchange Study (CASES-99) are investigated. Although the winds
were light and variable near the surface, Doppler lidar profiles of wind speed often indicated persistent
profile shapes and magnitudes for periods of an hour or more, sometimes exhibiting jetlike maxima. The
near-surface structure of the boundary layer (BL) on the five nights all showed characteristics typical of the
vSBL. These characteristics included a shallow traditional BL only 10–30 m deep with weak intermittent
turbulence within the strong surface-based radiation inversion. Above this shallow BL sat a layer of very
weak turbulence and negligible turbulent mixing. The focus of this paper is on the effects of this quiescent
layer just above the shallow BL, and the impacts of this quiescent layer on turbulent transport and numerical
modeling. High-frequency time series of temperature T on a 60-m tower showed that 1) the
amplitudes of the T fluctuations were dramatically suppressed at levels above 30 m in contrast to the
relatively larger intermittent T fluctuations in the shallow BL below, and 2) the temperature at 40- to 60-m
height was nearly constant for several hours, indicating that the very cold air near the surface was not being
mixed upward to those levels. The presence of this quiescent layer indicates that the atmosphere above the
shallow BL was isolated and detached both from the surface and from the shallow BL.
Although some of the nights studied had modestly stronger winds and traveling disturbances (density
currents, gravity waves, shear instabilities), these disturbances seemed to pass through the region without
having much effect on either the SBL structure or on the atmosphere–surface decoupling. The decoupling
suggests that under very stable conditions, the surface-layer lower boundary condition for numerical
weather prediction models should act to decouple and isolate the surface from the atmosphere, for example,
as a free-slip, thermally insulated layer.
A multiday time series of ozone from an air quality campaign in Tennessee, which exhibited nocturnal
behavior typical of polluted air, showed the disappearance of ozone on weak low-level jets (LLJ) nights.
This behavior is consistent with the two-stratum structure of the vSBL, and with the nearly complete
isolation of the surface and the shallow BL from the rest of the atmosphere above, in contrast to cases with
stronger LLJs, where such coupling was stronger.
Genre Article
Topic Low-level jets
Identifier Banta, Robert M., Larry Mahrt, Dean Vickers, Jielun Sun, Ben B. Balsley, Yelena L. Pichugina, Eric J. Williams, 2007: The Very Stable Boundary Layer on Nights with Weak Low-Level Jets. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 64(9), 3068–3090.

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